April XI
St. Leo The Great, Pope
From the councils, t. 4, this pope’s works in the late Roman edition, and the historians of that age. See Tillemont, t. 15, p. 141, and Ceillier, t. 14, p. 316, who chiefly follow Quesnel’s collection of memoirs for his life, Op. t. 2, Diss. 1, which must be compared with, and often corrected by, the remarks of F. Cacciari, in his Exercitationes in Opera S. Leonis, especially in those De Hæresi Petagianâ et De Hæresi Eutychianâ.
A. D. 461.
St. Leo, surnamed the Great, was descended of a noble Tuscan family, but born at Rome, as he himself and St. Prosper assure us.1 The quickness of his parts, and the maturity of his judgment, appeared in the rapid progress which he made in his studies. Having rendered himself a great master in the different branches of polite literature, especially eloquence, he turned his thoughts entirely to the study of the holy scriptures and theology, to which he made the profane sciences only subservient. “God, who destined him to gain great victories over error, and to subject human wisdom to the true faith, had put into his hands the arms of science and truth,” as an ancient general council says.2 Being made archdeacon of the church of Rome, he had the chief direction of the most important affairs under pope Celestine, as appears from St. Prosper, a letter of St. Cyril to him, and Cassian’s book against Nestorius. To his penetration and zeal it was owing afterwards that Sextus III discovered the dissimulation of Julian the Pelagian, and rejected his false repentance. It happened that Aetius and Albinus, the two generals of the emperor Valentinian III., were at variance it. Gaul, and no one being so well qualified to compose their differences as the eloquent and virtuous archdeacon Leo, he was sent upon that important commission. During his absence, Sixtus III. died, in 440, and the Roman clergy cast their eyes on him for their pastor, judging that he, who for sanctity, learning, prudence, and eloquence, was the first man of his age, was the most worthy and fit to be seated in the first chair of the church. The qualifications and virtues which we admire when found single in others, were all united in him to a very great degree. This justly raised, throughout the Christian world, the highest expectations from his administration; which yet his great actions far surpassed. He was invited to Rome by a public embassy, and expected with impatience; but it was forty days before he could arrive. The joy with which he was received is not to be expressed, and he received the episcopal consecration on Sunday the 29th of September, in 440. We learn from himself what were his sentiments at the news of his exaltation. He considered a high dignity as a place where falls are most frequent, and always most dangerous; and he cried out:3 “Lord, I have heard your voice calling me, and I was afraid: I considered the work which was enjoined me, and I trembled. For what proportion is there between the burden assigned to me and my weakness, this elevation and my nothingness? What is more to be feared than exaltation without merit, the exercise of the most holy functions being intrusted to one who is buried in sin? O you who have laid upon me this heavy burden, bear it with me, I beseech you: be you my guide and my support: give me strength, you who have called me to the work; who have laid this heavy burden on my shoulders.”
A heart thus empty of itself could not fail to be supported and directed by the divine grace. He was called to the government of the church in the most difficult times, and he diligently applied himself without delay to cultivate the great field committed to his care, and especially to pluck up the weeds of errors, and to root out the thorns of vices wherever they appeared. He never intermitted to preach to his people with great zeal; which he often mentions as the most indispensable duty of pastors, and the constant practice of his predecessors.4 A hundred and one sermons preached by this pope on the principal festivals of the year, are still extant. He often inculcates in them the practice of holy fasting and almsdeeds, as good works which ought to be joined and support each other. We have among his works nine sermons on the fast of the tenth mouth, or of Ember-days in December. He says, the Church has instituted the Ember-days in the four seasons of the year to sanctify each season by a fast:5 also to pay to God a tribute of thanksgiving for the fruits and other blessings which we continually receive from his bounty:6 and to arm us constantly against the devil. He sets forth the obligation of alms, which is so great that for this alone God gives riches, and not to be hoarded up, or lavished in superfluities: and at the last day he seems in his sentence chiefly to recompense this virtue, and to punish the neglect of it, to show us how much almsdeeds are the key of heaven, and of all other graces.7 He says this obligation binds all persons, though it is not to be measured by what a man has, but by the heart; for all men are bound to have the same benevolence, and desire of relieving others.8 That the rich are obliged to seek out the bashful poor, who are to be assisted without being put to the blush in receiving.9 He shows the institution of Collects or gatherings for the poor, to be derived from the apostles, and ever to have been continued in the church for the relief of the indigent.10 He surpasses himself in sentiment and eloquence whenever he speaks of the sweetness of the divine love which is displayed to us in the mystery of the incarnation of the Son of God. His one hundred and forty-one epistles are wholly employed in treating on important subjects of discipline and faith, and alone suffice to show his pastoral vigilance and immense labors in every part of the Christian world, for the advancement of piety. He brought many infidels to the faith, and took great delight in instructing them himself. His signal victories over the Manichees, Arians, Apollinarists, Nestorians, Eutychians, Novatians, and Donatists, are standing proofs of his zeal for the purity of the faith. Carthage being taken by the Vandals in 439, a great number of Manichees fled out of Africa to Rome: but there, to escape the rigor of the imperial laws against their sect, feigned themselves Catholics. They called wine the gall of the dragon, produced by the devil or their evil god: on which account they always refrained from that liquor, which they regarded as, of its own nature, unclean. To conceal themselves, they received the holy communion from the Catholic priests, but under one kind alone, which it was left to every one’s discretion then to do This affectation of the heretics passed some time unobserved, as we learn from St. Leo,11 in the year 433* But he no sooner discovered this sacrilegious abuse, than he took the utmost care to prevent the contagion from infecting his flock. He detected several of these heretics, and among them one whom they called their bishop, and to manifest the impiety of this sect, he assembled several bishops and priests, and the most illustrious persons of the senate and empire, and caused the elect of the Manichees, that is, those that were initiated in their mysteries, to be introduced.12 They confessed publicly many impious tenets,* superstitions, and a crime which modesty forbids to be named.13 St. Prosper says their books were burnt; but many of them repented, and abjured their heresy. St. Leo, in receiving them into the church, exhorted his people to pray and sigh with him for them.14 Those that remained obstinate were banished. St. Leo, about the same time, crushed Pelagianism, which began again to show its head about Aquileia.15 His watchfulness put a stop to the growing evil, both in those parts and in Rome itself, where St. Prosper detected some remains of the same leaven. For this pope, who was a true judge of merit, and drew many learned men about his person, had chosen St. Prosper of Aquitaine his secretary, to write his letters and dispatch the like business. The Priscillianist heretics reigned almost uncontrolled in Spain: only St. Turibius, bishop of Astorga, zealously opposed them. St. Leo wrote to commend his zeal, and to awake the attention of the other bishops of that country, whom he ordered to convene a council for the extirpation of the spreading cancer.16 He examined the cause of Chelidonius, bishop of Besançon, deposed by St. Hilary of Arles, and restored him to his see.17 He transferred the dignity of primate from the see of Arles to that of Vienne in Gaul, which Zosimus had formerly adjudged to Arles,18 “Out of respect,” as he said, “for the blessed Trophimus, (first bishop of Arles,) from the fountain of whose preaching all the Gauls had received the streams of faith.”19 The learned De Marca thinks that St. Leo did not deny the jurisdiction of Hilary over Besançon before that time, but he judged Chelidonius not to have been guilty of that which had been laid to his charge, adding, “that the sentence would have stood firm, if the things objected had been true.”† St. Leo laid down this important maxim for the rule of his conduct, never to give any decision, especially to the prejudice of another, before he had examined into the affair with great caution and exactness, and most carefully taken all informations possible. He was very careful in the choice of persons whom he promoted to holy orders, as his writings show; yet the author of the Spiritual Meadow relates, that he heard Amos, patriarch of Jerusalem, say to several abbots: “Pray for me. The dreadful weight of the priesthood affrights me beyond measure, especially the charge of conferring orders. I have found it written, that the blessed pope Leo, equal to the angels, watched and prayed forty days at the tomb of St. Peter, begging through the intercession of that apostle to obtain of God the pardon of his sins. After this term, St. Peter, in a vision, said to him: Your sins are forgiven you by God, except those committed by you in conferring holy orders: of these you still remain charged to give a rigorous account.”20 St. Leo, with regard to those who are to be ordained ministers of the altar, lays down this rule, inserted in his words into the body of the canon law: “What is it not to lay hands upon any one suddenly, according to the precept of the apostle, but not to raise to the honor of the priesthood any who have not been thoroughly tried, or before a mature age, a competent time of trial, the merit of labor in the service of the church, and sufficient proofs given of their submission to rule, and their love of discipline and zeal for its observance.”21
Many affairs in the churches of the East furnished this great pope with much employment, as the intrusion of Bassian into the see of Ephesus,22 &c. But above all the rest, the rising heresy of Eutyches drew his attention on that side of the world. This heresiarch had been condemned by St. Flavian in 448; yet, by the intrigues of Chrysaphius, a powerful eunuch, he prevailed with the weak emperor Theodosius II. to assemble a packed council at Ephesus, in which Dioscorus, the wicked patriarch of Alexandria, an Eutychian, and general disturber of Christian peace, took upon him to preside. This pretended synod, commonly called the Latrocinale, or cabal of Ephesus, met on the 8th of August, 449, acquitted Eutyches, and condemned St. Flavian, with a degree of malice and violence unheard of among barbarians.* The legates of Leo, who were Julius, bishop of Puozzoli, the ancient Puteoli, Renatus, a priest, Hilarius, a deacon, and Dulcitius, a notary, refused to subscribe to the unjust sentence, and opposed it with a zeal and vigor that was admired by the whole world, says Theodoret.23 Upon the first advice of these proceedings, St. Leo declared them null and void,24 and at the same time he wrote St. Flavian to encourage him, and to the emperor himself, telling him that no sacrilegious cabal ever came up to the fury of this assembly,25 and conjuring him in these words: “Leave to the bishops the liberty of defending the faith: no powers or terrors of the world will ever be able to destroy it. Protect the Church, and seek to preserve its peace, that Christ may protect your empire.” He adds, that he trembles to see him draw down the divine vengeance upon his own head: which had the appearance of a prediction on account of the various misfortunes which befell that prince and his sudden death: though before the latter event his eyes began to be opened. Marcian and St. Pulcheria succeeding in the empire, vigorously supported the zealous endeavors of the pope. By his authority the general council of Chalcedon, consisting of six hundred or six hundred and thirty bishops, was opened on the 8th of October, in 451. St. Leo presided by his legates, Paschasinus, bishop of Lilybæum, Lucentius, bishop of Ascoli, and Boniface, priest of Rome. In this synod the memory of St. Flavian was vindicated, and Dioscorus was convicted of having maliciously suppressed the letters of St. Leo in the Latrocinale of Ephesus, and of having presumed to excommunicate St. Leo, which attempt was made the principal cause of his deposition: for which, besides other crimes, it was also urged against him, that he had pretended to hold a general council without the authority of the pope, a thing never lawful, and never done, as was observed by the pope’s legates.26 For these crimes and excesses, he was by the pope’s legates and the whole council declared excommunicated and deposed.27 St. Leo had written to St. Flavian on the 13th of June, in 449, a long and accurate doctrinal letter, in which he clearly expounded the Catholic faith concerning the mystery of the incarnation, against the errors both of Nestorius and Eutyches. This excellent letter had been suppressed by Dioscorus, but was read by the legates at Chalcedon, and declared by the voice of that general council to be dictated by the Holy Ghost, and to be a rule throughout the universal Church. The great Theodoret having read it, blessed God for having preserved his holy faith.28 St. Leo approved all things that had been done in this council relating to definitions of faith; but, being an enemy to innovations, vigorously opposed the twenty-eighth canon, framed in the absence of his legates, by which the archbishop of Constantinople was declared a patriarch,* and the first among the patriarchs of the East.29 However, the eastern bishops, who usually found access to the emperor through the bishop of Constantinople, allowed him that pre-eminence, which the law of custom confirmed.30 The same council declared the bishop of Jerusalem independent of Antioch, and primate of the three Palestines.31 In the synodal letter to St. Leo, the fathers beseech him to confirm their decrees, saying, “he had presided over them as the head over its members.”32 The pope restrained his confirmation to the decrees relating to matters of faith,33 which were received with the utmost respect imaginable by the whole Church. Theodoret was restored to his see in the council, after having anathematized Nestorius. Ibas, bishop of Edessa. who had been unjustly deposed with Theodoret in the Latrocinale of Ephesus, was likewise restored upon the same condition. The latter seems never to have been very solicitous about Nestorius, but was a warm defender of Theodorus of Mopsuestia, whom he regarded as an orthodox doctor, because he died in the communion of the Church. Ibas was accused of Nestorianism, but acquitted by Domnus, patriarch of Antioch, and a council held in that city in 448. But his letter to Maris, the Persian, was afterwards condemned in the fifth general council.
While the eastern empire was thus distracted by heretical factions, the western was harassed by barbarians. Attila, the Hunn, enriched with the plunder of many nations and cities, marched against Rome.* In the general consternation, Saint Leo, at the request of the whole city of Rome, went to meet Attila, in hopes of mollifying his rage, and averting the danger that threatened his country. Avienus, a man of consular dignity, and Trygetius, who had been prefect of the city, were deputed to accompany him in this embassy. They found the haughty tyrant at Ambuleium, near Ravenna, where the highway passes the river Menzo. Contrary to the expectation of every one, he received the pope with great honor, gave him a favorable audience, and, through his suggestion, concluded a treaty of peace with the empire on the condition of an annual tribute. Baronius, from a writer of the eighth century, relates, that Attila saw two venerable personages, supposed to be the apostles SS. Peter and Paul, standing on the side of the pope while he spoke. The king immediately commanded his army to forbear all hostilities, and soon after repassed the Alps, and retired beyond the Danube into Pannonia, but in his way home was seized with a violent vomiting of blood, of which he died in 453. Divisions among his children and princes destroyed the empire of the Huns.34 Thus fell the most haughty and furious of all the barbarian heathen kings, styled the terror of the world, and the scourge of God, whose instrument he was in punishing the sins of Christians. It was the glory of St. Leo to have checked his fury and protected Rome, when it was in no condition of defence. In 455, the friends of Aëtius (whose greatness and arrogance had given the emperor so much umbrage that he caused him to be assassinated) revenged the death of that general by the murder of Valentinian himself. His wife Eudoxia married by compulsion the tyrant Maximus who had usurped the throne: but, not brooking these affronts, she invited Genseric, the Arian Vandal king, from Africa, to come and revenge the murder of her husband. Maximus fled, but was slain by Valentinian’s servants on the 12th of June, in the twenty-seventh day of his reign, in 455. Three days after, Genseric arrived, and found the gates of Rome open to receive him. St. Leo went out to meet him, and prevailed with him to restrain his troops from slaughter and burning, and to content himself with the plunder of the city. The example of St. Leo shows, that even in the worst of times, a holy pastor is the greatest comfort and support of his flock. After the departure of the Vandals with their captives, and an immense booty, St. Leo sent zealous Catholic priests and alms for the relief of the captives in Africa. He repaired the Basilics, and replaced the rich plate and ornaments of the churches which had been plundered, though some part had escaped by being concealed, especially what belonged to the churches of SS. Peter and Paul, which Baronius thinks Genseric spared, and granted to them the privilege of sanctuaries, as was done at other times. This great pope, for his humility, mildness, and charity, was reverenced and beloved by emperors, princes, and all ranks of people, even infidels and barbarians. He filled the holy see twenty-one years, one month, and thirteen days, dying on the 10th of November, 461. His body was interred in the church of St. Peter, and afterwards translated to another place, in the same church, on the 11th of April; on which day his name is placed in the Roman calendar. His relics were again translated with great solemnity and devotion, enclosed in a case of lead, and placed in the altar dedicated to God under his invocation, in the Vatican church, in the year 1715, as is related at length by Pope Benedict XIV.35 A writer who delights in retailing slander, could not refuse this character of St. Leo: “He was,” says he, “without doubt, a man of extraordinary parts, far superior to all who had governed that church before him, and scarce equalled by any since.”36
The writings of this great pastor are the monuments of his extraordinary genius and piety.* His thoughts are true, bright, and strong; and in every sentiment and __EXPRESSION__ we find a loftiness which raises our admiration. By it we are dazzled and surprised in every period, and while we think it impossible that the style should not sink, we are astonished always to find it swelling in the same tenor, and with equal dignity and strength. His diction is pure and elegant; his style concise, clear, and pleasing. It would sometimes appear turgid in another; but in him, where it seems to swell the highest, a natural ease and delicacy remove all appearance of affectation and study, and show it to be the pure effort of a surprising genius and lofty natural eloquence. But the dress with which he clothes his thoughts, is much less to be considered than the subjects themselves of which he treats, in which the most consummate piety and skill in theology equally raise admiration, instruct and edify his readers in the learned and pious sermons, and doctrinal letters which compose his works. His unwearied zeal and unshaken steadiness against vice and error, though armed with all the power of a world leagued with the devils against the truth, procured the church infinite advantages and victories over the reigning novelties of that age; and his writings are an armory against all succeeding heresies. He fully and clearly explains the whole mystery of the incarnation; he proves,37 against the Eutychians, that Christ had a true body, because his body is really received in the holy eucharist. He laments as the greatest of spiritual evils, that at Alexandria, during the violences exercised by the Eutychians, the oblation of the sacrifice, and the benediction of chrism had been interrupted.38 He is very explicit on the supremacy of St. Peter,39 and on that of his successors.40 He often recommends himself to the prayers of the saints reigning in heaven, especially of St. Peter, and exhorts others to place great confidence in their powerful intercession.41 He honors their relics and festivals;42 and testifies that their churches were adorned with lights.43 He calls the fast of Lent an apostolical tradition, also that of the Ember-days, Whitsun-eve, &c.44 He adds, that the church retained the fast of Ember-days in December from the Jewish practice before Christ. Pope Benedict XIV., in a decree by which he commands St. Leo to be honored with the mass peculiar to doctors, dated in 1744, bestows on him due praises for his eminent learning and sanctity.45
According to the observation of this holy doctor46 it is a fundamental maxim of our holy religion, that the only true and valuable riches consist in that blessed poverty of spirit which Christ teaches us to look upon as the first and main step to all happiness. This is a profound and sincere humility of heart, and a perfect disengagement from all inordinate love of earthly goods. By this rule, those who are exalted above others by their rank, learning, or other abilities, differ not by these advantages from the poorest in the eyes of God: only poverty of spirit makes the distinction, and shows which is truly the greatest. Of this courageous poverty the apostles and primitive Christians set us the most illustrious example. “What is greater than this their humility? What is richer than this their poverty?” By imitating this spirit we enter into the possession of the riches of Christ. And we shall improve our share in all these spiritual treasures of grace, love, peace, and all virtues, in proportion as we shall advance in this spirit. St. Leo puts us in mind, in another place,47 that in putting on this spirit, which is no other than that of Christ, or the new man, consists that newness of life in which we are bound to walk according to the spirit of Christ; which delivers us from the power of darkness, and transfers us into the kingdom of the Son of God; which raises our love and desires of heavenly goods, and extinguishes in us the concupiscence of the flesh. We put on this spirit by baptism, and we strengthen ourselves in it by being fed with the body of Christ. ‘For what is the fruit of our partaking of the body and blood of Christ, but that we may pass into that which we receive; and that in whom we are dead, and buried, and raised again, (in the newness of our spirit and life,) we may bear him both in spirit and in our flesh through all things.” Next to frequent devout communion, the assiduous meditation on the life of Christ is the most powerful means of learning the true spirit of his divine virtues, particularly of that humility of which his whole life was the most astonishing model, and which is the summary of his holy precepts.48 St. Leo, by his tender devotion to our Redeemer, and the zeal with which he defended the mystery of his incarnation, was penetrated with his spirit of poverty and humility; from whence sprang that ardent charity, that admirable greatness of soul, and that invincible courage which were so conspicuous in all his actions.
St. Antipas, M.
Called by Christ his faithful witness, Apoc. 11:13. He suffered at Pergamus; where his tomb was famed for miracles in after ages. See Papebroke, p. 4; Tillemont, t. 2, p. 130.
St. Guthlake, Hermit,
and patron of the abbey of croyland*
He was a nobleman, and in his youth served in the armies of Ethelred, king of Mercia: but the grace of God making daily stronger impressions on his heart, in the twenty-fourth year of his age he reflected how dangerous a thing it is to the soul to serve in wars which too often have no other motive than the passions of men and the vanities of the world, and resolved to consecrate the remainder of his life totally to the service of the King of kings. He passed two years in the monastery of Repandun, studying to transcribe the virtues and mortifications of all the brethren into the copy of his own life. After this novitiate in the exercises of an ascetic life, with the consent of his superior, in 699, with two companions, he passed in a fisher’s boat into the isle of Croyland, on the festival of St. Bartholomew, whom he chose for his patron, and, by having recourse to his intercession, he obtained of God many singular favors. Here he suffered violent temptations and assaults, not unlike those which St. Athanasius relates of St. Antony: he also met with severe interior trials, but likewise received frequent extraordinary favors and consolations from God. Hedda, bishop of Dorchester, visiting him, ordained him a priest. The prince Ethelbald, then an exile, often resorted to him, and the saint foretold him the crown of the Mercians, to which he was called after the death of king Coelred, in 719. The saint, foreknowing the time of his death, sent for his sister Pega,† who lived a recluse in another part of the fens, four leagues off to the west. He sickened of a fever, and on the seventh day of his illness, during which he had said mass every morning, and on that day by way of viaticum, he sweetly slept in our Lord, on the 11th of April, 714, being forty-seven years old, of which he had passed fifteen in this island. See his life written by Felix monk of Jarrow, a contemporary author, from the relation of Bertelin, the companion of the saint’s retirement, with the notes of Henschenius;* Mabillon, Acta Bened. t. 3, p. 263, n. 1. See also his short English-Saxon life, Bibl. Cotton. Julius, A. X.
St. Maccai, Abbot
A disciple of St. Patrick, who flourished in the isle of Bute, in Scotland, and was there honored after his death. See Bp. Lesley’s nephew, De Vitis Sanctor. Scot. p. 235.
St. Aid, of Eacharaidh
Abbot in Ireland, titular saint of a parish church, an ancient abbey, and a great number of chapels in that island. See Colgan MSS. ad 11 Apr.
1 Ep. 27, ad Pulcher. c. 4.
2 Conc. t. 4, p. 820.
3 Serm. 2, de Assumpt. suâ. c. 1, p. 4, t. 1. ed. Rom
4 Serm. 3, 7, 11.
5 Serm. 18.
6 Serm. 12.
7 Serm. 8, c. 3, p. 17, and Serm. 9, c. 3, p. 20; Serm. 10. c. 1, p. 21.
8 Serm. 7, item 5 and 6, 16, 39, &c.
9 Serm. 8, p. 17.
10 Serm. 10, p. 21.
11 Serm. 4, de Quadrag. t. 1, p. 217.
* This practice they continued, all pope Gelasius, in 496, above forty years after St. Leo’s time, effectually to prevent those sacrilegious and superstitious communions of unworthy hypocrites, commanded all to receive under both kinds: which law subsisted at Rome as long as the Manichæan heresy made it necessary: but after that danger was over, this ordinance of discipline ceased by disuse.
12 Ep. 8, p. 33. and Ep. 15, c. 16, p. 71, t. 1; Serm. 15, p. 31, t. 1; Serm. 33. p. 87; Serm. 41, p. 111.
* Dr. Lardner, in his Credibility of the Gospel, vol. ix., charges St. Leo with falsely accusing the Manichees of abominable practices without the least color of reason. He ought to have taken notice that though the testimony of St. Leo is alone satisfactory, we must certainly believe these heretics against themselves, for they were publicly convicted of these crimes, and openly confessed the same before the most illustrious personages of the Church and State. See Cacciari, Exercitationes in Op. S. Leonis M. de Manichæorum hæresi, l. 2, c. 7, p. 142, c. 9, p. 154.
13 Ep. 15, ad Turib. p. 62; Serm. 15.
14 Serm. 33, Ep. 8.
15 Ep. 15.
16 Ib.
17 Ep. 9, 10.
18 See Baronius, ad an. 417.
19 Zosimus, Ep. ad ep. Gal.
† A notorious slanderer has presumed to fasten upon St. Leo the censure of haughtiness and injustice in this affair: but he certainly only betrays his own malice. Hilary was present in the pope’s council at Rome, together with Chelidonius; but was not able to make good his charge against him. He had also ordained another bishop to the see of Projectus, while he was living, who, being then sick, afterwards recovered. This precipitate action of Hilary was an infraction of the canons: nor does his apologist, the author of his life, offer any excuse. To satisfy the clamors of Chelidonius, Projectus, and others, and chiefly by his example to enforce the most strict observation of that important canon, the neglect of which would fill the church on every side with schisms and confusion, St. Leo deprived Hilary of the primacy over the province of Vienne for the time to come, though he restored part of it to his successor. See Fabre, Panegyrique et Histoire de la Ville d’Arles, 1743. St. Leo indeed seems to have not been acquainted in the beginning with the true character of St. Hilary, and therefore to have proceeded with the greater severity: but he showed that his heart was incapable of rancor by the ample testimony which he gave to the sanctity of St. Hilary after his death, in a letter to his successor Ravenuus, ep. 37, ed Quesn. 36, ed. Rom p. 171. t. 2.
20 Prat. Spir. c. 149.
21 St. Leo, ep. 1, t. 2, p. 2, ed. Rom. Item Distinct. 78, 3. Quid est manus. from 1 Tim. 5:22
22 Conc. t. 4, p. 687.
* On the appeal of St. Flavian to the pope St. Leo, see Cacciari, Exercitationes in Opera S. Leonis, Dissert. de Hæresi Eutychianâ, l. 1, c. 8, p. 387, and c. 9, p. 393. Valentinianus Imp. ep. ad Theodosium Imp inter ep. S. Leonis, 49, p. 201, t. 2. On the appeal of Theodoret to pope Leo, Cacciari, ibid. and on that of Eutychos, ib.
23 Theodoret, ep. 116.
24 Conc. t. 4, p. 47, and Saint Leo, ep. 49 and 56, ed. Quesn. 50 and 57, ed. Rom.
25 St. Leo, ep. 42, in ed. Quesn. 43, in ed. Rom p. 187, t. 2; St. Leo ad Theodos. Imp. ep. 40, ed. Quesn. 41, ed. Rom. p. 178 Ep. ad Pulcheriam Augustam, ep. 41, ed. Quesn. 42, ed. Rom. p. 183.
26 See Marca de Concordia, Sac et Imperii. l. 5, c. 5, and Cacciari, Exercitat. In Op. S. Leonis, Dissert. de Hæresi Eutychianâ.
27 Conc. t. 4, p. 424.
28 Theodoret, ep. 121.
* The episcopal see of Byzantium was subject to the metropolitan of Heraclea in Thrace, till, in the reign of Constantine, it was honored with the metropolitical dignity. By the second general council, held at Constantinople, a precedence was given to the archbishops of this city, before all the other bishops and patriarchs of the East, and from that time they exercised a superior jurisdiction over Thrace, Asia Minor, and Pontus: which Theodoret calls (Hist. l. 5. c. 28) three districts, consisting of twenty-eight provinces, which St. Chrysostom governed. This decree of the council of Constantinople is called by some the date of its patriarchal dignity; though it be more properly referred by others to the twenty-eighth canon of the council of Chalcedon. See Thomassin, Discipline de l’Eglise, l. 1, c. 6, p. 22. Le Quien shows that this canon was originally framed by the clergy of Constantinople, and the bishops whose situation rendered them dependent on that church: that St. Leo rejected it, and stirred up the other Oriental patriarchs and bishops to maintain the ancient discipline: that St. Proterius, patriarch of Alexandria, and all the bishop of Egypt, strenuously opposed this innovation, and so great a number among the Oriental bishop vigorously exerted their zeal against it, that the archbishops of Constantinople dropped their pretensions to this privilege till it was revived by Acacius: from which time it gradually gained ground, till at length other churches acquiesced in it. See Le Quien, Oriens Christianus de Patriarchatu Constantinopletano. c. 9. t. 1, p. 40. Item, de Patr. Alexandr t. 2, p. 339
29 St. Leo, ep. 87, 92.
30 See Thomassin, Discipline de l’Eglise, l. 1, ch. 6.
31 Sess. 7.
32 Conc. t. 4, p. 833.
33 St. Leo, ep. 87, c. 2, p. 613, ep. 92, c. 5, p. 623, &c.
* The Hunns, a savage nation from that part of Scythia which now lies in Muscovy, had passed the Palus Mæotis, in 276, and made their first inroads upon the coasts of the Caspian sea, and as far as mount Taurus in the East. Almost two hundred years after this. Attila, the most powerful and barbarous of all the kings of that nation, in 433, had marched first into the East, then subject to Theodosius the younger, and having amassed a vast booty in Asia, returned into Pannonia, where he was already master of a large territory. His next expedition was directed against the western part of the empire. His army marching through Germany, drew along with it additional supplies from all the barbarous nations near which it passed, and amounted at length to the number of five hundred, Jornandes says seven hundred, thousand fighting men; all stirred up by no other motive than the hope of great spoils from the plunder of the richest countries of the empire. Entering Gaul, Attila laid in ruins Tongres, Triers, and Metz. Troyes was spared by him, at the entreaty of St. Lupus, and St. Nicasius preserved Rheims. The barbarian had just taken Orleans by storm, when Aëtius, the Roman general, came up with him, expelled him that city, and followed him to the plains of Mauriac or Challons, which, according to Jornandes, were extended in length one hundred miles, and seventy in breadth, and seem to have comprised the whole country, known since the sixth century under the name of Champagne. Here Attila halted, and when Aëtius, with the Romans, Visigoths, and Burgundians, came up, these vast fields seemed covered with troops. In a most bloody battle, the Hunns were here discomfited. Attila, enraged at this defeat, and having repaired his losses of the former year, entered Italy by Pannonia, in 453, took and burned Aquileia, and filled the whole country with blood, and desolation Some of the inhabitants, who fled from his arms into the little islands in the shallow takes at the head of the Adriatic gulf, here laid the foundations of the city of Venice, which we find named at Cassiodorus, fifty years after this event. Attila sacked Milan, razed Pavia, and wherever he passed laid waste whole provinces. The weak emperor Valentinian III. shut himself up in Ravenna, and the Romans, in the utmost terror, expected to see the barbarian speedily before their gates. Such was the state of affairs when Leo went to meet Attila.
34 Jornand. Rer. Goth., c. 12, 49. Prosp. in Chron. ad an. 452.
35 De Canoniz. 1. 4, c. 22, § 8, 9, 10; t. 4, pp. 212, 213.
36 Bower, the apostate Jesuit, in his Lives of the Popes, on St. Leo, t. 2.
* Quesnel’s edition of the works of St. Leo, more ample than any that had preceded, appeared at Paris in 1675, was condemned by the Roman inquisition in 1676. which prohibition was inserted in the Roman Index, in 1682, p. 277. This oratorian in several of the summaries, in many passages in the sixteen dissertations which he subjoined, and in some unwarrantable alterations of the text itself of St. Leo, is clearly convicted of dealing unfairly, in order to favor his own erroneous doctrine, and to weaken certain proofs of the authority of the holy see. The editor gave a second edition, with some critical amendments, (though not in the most essential points.) at Lyons, in 1675. Savioli, a printer at Venice, gave a new edition of the works of SS. Leo and Maximus, in 1741, with most of Quesnel’s notes and dissertations: but by supine carelessness has printed the text extremely incorrect. Poleti, another printer at Venice, published, in 1748, another edition of SS. Leo and Maximus, with the summaries of Quesnel, without his dissertations: the text is printed from Quesnel’s edition, with all its faults. The falsifications of Quesnel in this edition are complained of, and several proved upon him by Baluze. Not. et Observ. ad Con. Calced. by Antelmi, John Salinas. Coutant, &c. The collection of canons to which Quesnel has prefixed the false title of the Ancient Code of Canons of the Roman Church, (Op. S. Leonis, t. 2. p. 1,) is evidently a private compilation of canons of different ages and countries of a modern date, as Coutant (in Collect. Pontif. Romanor Epistol. Præfat. Gener. p. 57) and others have demonstrated. The church of Rome made one of the code of canons of the universal Church, which Quesnel endeavored to confine to the eastern churches. This consisted of the canons of the four first general councils, and of the councils of Ancyra, Gangres, Neocæsaria, Antioch, and Laodices. It was augmented by the addition of the fifty canons called of the apostles, those of Sardica, and several others, made by Dionysius the Little, about the year 520. Pope Adrin I, sent a copy to Charlemagne, telling him that the church of Rome had used this code for three hundred years. Baluze (Dissert. de Thelensi Concilio.) shows that Quesnel omitted certain passages, because he thought them too favorable to the see of Rome. In the council of Telepté, (a city in Byzacena.) Quesnel foisted in the name of Telense, for Telepté, that he might forge some argument to reject it with the Epistola Tractatoria Syricii Papæ per Africam. See Baluze and Cacciari in t. 2. Op. St. Leonis, p. 55. But enough on Quesnel’s edition of the works of St. Leo.
F. Cacciari, a Carmelite friar, printed the same at Rome, with notes, in two volumes fol. anno 1753. The sermons of this holy pope are contained in the first, being one hundred and one in number: of which Quesnel had only given us ninety-six. In the second we have one hundred and forty-five letters of St. Leo, besides several others of emperors and other eminent persons relating to St. Leo’s affairs. Quesnel had only published one hundred and forty-one letters of this pope. They are most interesting both for Church history, and for many important dogmatical decrees and rules of discipline which they contain. F. Cacciari gave us, in 1751, Exercitationes in Opera S. Leonis, M. in folio, consisting of several dissertations on the heresies of the Manichæans, Priscillianists, Pelagians, and Eutychians. Theologians and the whole church stand much indented to him for his labors; but the value of the present would have been enhanced if the style had been closer, and less scholastic, and the __EXPRESSION__s on some occasions more genteel. A French translation of the sermons of St. Leo was published by Abbé Bellegarde, at Paris in 1701
37 Ep. 46. c. 2, p. 260, ed. Quesn.; Ep. 47, p. 193. ed. Rom. Vide etiam Serm. 6, de Jejunio Septimi Mensis. &c.
38 Ep. 125, ad Leon. Imper., c. 5, p. 337 ed. Quesn.; Ep. 129. ed. Rom. p. 435.
39 Serm. 2, p. 52, ed. Quesn., pp. 5, 6, ed. Rom., &c.
40 Ep. 89, 93. 4, 5. 10. ed. Quesn. 91. 95. 4, 5. 10. ed. Rom.
41 Serm. 4, c. 5, p. 13; Serm. 3, p. 11; Serm. 34, c. 4. p. 91. 83. ed. Quesn. 87, ed. Rom. See also Serm 15, p. 32; Serm. 18 p. 39; Serm. 41, p. 112; Serm. 76, ed. Quesn. 78, ed. Rom. p. 236; Serm. 80, ed. Quesn. 12, ed. Rom. p. 238; Serm. 81, ed. Quesn. 83, ed. Rom. p. 240., and in several other sermons on the saints.
42 Ep. 59 ed. Quesn. 60, ed. Rom. t. 2, p. 245, &c.
43 Serm. 100, in Cathedrâ S. Petri, c. 2, p. 286.
44 Serm. 46, de Quadragesimâ, p. 125; Serm. 77, ed. Quesn. 79, ed. Rom., p. 230
45 Bened. XIV. Constit. Militantis Ecclesiæ.
46 Serm. 96, ed Quesn.; 99, ed. Rom. p. 279.
47 Serm. 43, c. 7 1, p. 180, ed. Rom.
48 Serm. 36, c. 3, p. 95. ib.
* Called in the English Saxon language Guthlacer of Cruwland.
† St. Pega is honored on the 8th of January. Her cell, near Peakirk, stood at the extremity of a high ground, which juts out into the fenny level, where is the chapel of St. Pega’s monastery. Here passed Carsdike, so called from Carausius. It was projected by Agricola, and perfected by Severus, to carry corn in boats for the army in the North. It was conducted from Peterborough into the Trent at Torksey, below Burton, whence the navigation was carried on by natural rivers to York. Carausius repaired it, and continued it on the borders of the fenny level as far as Cambridge, which he built and called Granta. This place was the head of the navigation, and Carausius instituted the great fair when the fleet of boats set out with corn and other provisions, which is still kept, with many of the ancient Roman customs, under the name of Stourbridge fair. See Stukeley’s Medallic History of Carausius, t. 1, p. 172, &c. t. 2, c. 5, p. 129.
* Ingolphus, the great and learned abbot of Croyland, who died in 1109, wrote a book. On the life and miracles of St. Guthlake, which is not now extant. His accurate history of the abbey of Croyland, from the year 664 to 1091, was published by Sir Henry Saville, but far more complete and correct by Thomas Gale, in 1684. In it he relates, p. 16, that in the year 851, Ceolnoth, archbishop of Canterbury, by having recourse to the intercession of St. Guthlake, was miraculously cured of a palsy, after his recovery had been despaired of. This miracle the archbishop attested in a council of bishops and noblemen, in presence of king Bertulf: upon which occasion, all that were present hound themselves by oath to perform a pilgrimage to the shrine of the saint at Croyland. After this miracle, great numbers seized with the same distemper recovered their health, by resorting thither from all parts of the kingdom to implore the divine succor through the intercession of his servant. Ethelbald, coming to the crown, had founded there a monastery. He had caused great stakes and piles of oak to be driven into the ground in this swampy place and the quagmire to be filled up with earth brought from the country called Upland, eight miles distant. This foundation being laid, he erected a church of stone, with a sumptuous monastery. This building was utterly destroyed by the Danes in 870, of all the monks and domestics, only one boy escaping to give the world an account of this massacre and devastation; in which the bodies of Cissa, priest and hermit, St. Egbat, St. Tatwin, St. Bettelina, St. Etheldrith, and others, were reduced to ashes. Some few monks still chose their residence there among the ruins, till Turketil, the pious chancellor to king Edred, in 946, rebuilt the abbey. This great man was cousin-german to three brothers who were all successively kings—Athelstan, Edmund, and Edred—being son of Ethelward, younger brother to their father Edward the Elder. To all these three kings he had been chief minister at home, and generalissimo in all their wars abroad, and had often vanquished the Danes and other enemies. When Analaph had rebelled and usurped the kingdom of Northumberland, with a numerous army of Danes, Norwegians, Scots, Picts, and Cumbrians, mostly idolaters, and put king Athelstan to flight at Bruntford in Northumberland, Turketil rescued him out of danger by defeating the enemy with his Londoners and Mercians, and killing Constantine, king of the Scots. The emperor Henry, Hugh, king of France, and Lewis, prince of Aquitaine, sent ambassadors with letters of congratulation for this victory, and rich presents of spices, jewels, horses, gold vessels, a part of the true cross, and of the crown of thorns in rich cases, the sword of Constantine the Great, in the hilt of which was one of the nails with which Christ was crucified, &c. Turketil was afterwards sent by king Athelstan to conduct his four royal sisters to their nuptials; the two first to Cologne, to the emperor Henry, where one married his son Otho, the other one of his princes: the third he accompanied to king Hugh, whose son she married; and the fourth was given in marriage to Lewis, prince of Aquitaine. The chancellor was enriched by these princes with many precious relics and other presents; all which he afterwards bestowed on the abbey of Croyland. Having long served his country, and subdued all its enemies, he earnestly begged of king Edred leave to resign his honors. The king, startled at the proposal, threw himself at his feet, entreating him not to forsake him. Turketil, seeing his sovereign at his feet, cast himself on the ground, and only rose to lift up the king: but adjuring him by the apostle St. Paul, (to whom the religious prince bore a singular devotion,) he at length extorted his consent. Immediately he dispatched a crier to proclaim through all the streets of London, that whoever had any demands upon Turketil, he should repair to him on a day, and at a place by him assigned, and he should be paid: and that if any one thought he had ever been injured by him, upon his complaint, he should receive full satisfaction for all damages, and threefold over and above. This he amply executed: then made over sixty of his manors to the king, and six to the monastery of Croyland. Being accompanied thither by the king, he there took the monastic habit, and was made abbot in 948. He restored the house to the greatest splendor; and, having served God in it twenty-seven years, died of a fever in 975, in the sixty-eighth year of his age. It was his usual saving, which he often repeated to his monks: “Preserve well the fire of your charity, and the fervor of your devotion.” Croyland, pronounced Crouland, signifies a desert fenny land. The monks, with incredible industry, rendered it fruitful, joined the island to the continent, and raised several stupendous works about it.
Butler, A., The Lives of the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saints (New York 1903) II, 64-73.